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I envision Montréal as some sexy androgyne character with a sweet moustache and a pair of lacy panties; its decidedly seedy underbelly is dressed up in a chichi couture suit, and it’s wearing vintage brown lace-up boots.

Bienvenue à la belle ville, home to a diverse mélange of people who share French as the lingua franca** (with English used by a sizable minority). Full-contact strip clubs are nestled between office buildings and shopping centers. It’s bitterly cold and snowy in the winter and savagely hot and humid in the summer (ever walked around under someone’s tongue? Ever wanted to? Just visit Montréal in late July). The city on the surface is only part of the show – there’s a whole ville souterraine to explore once the weather has kicked your ass.

Dépanneur du Village

The alternative crowd has a magnetic attraction to Québec’s sin city and its sea of underground culture and cutting edge art. It’s also one of the more tolerant and homo-friendly spots on earth, and its population is legendarily good-looking. (Coincidence? I think not) PS… Montrealers throw damn good parties. If you’re invited, don’t forget that beer o’clock is 11 PM (but most bars don’t close until 3 AM).

**Some of the resources here are only available in French. Wherever possible, I’ve linked to a bilingual or English webpages. Although most Montrealers are at least functionally French-English bilingual (many are fluent in both, and many are trilingual), if you’re in town, seriously try to use your French! It’s the official language. Your accent is hot, I promise.

High Priority Information: The Lesbian/Queer Bars

Le Drugstore (1366, rue Ste-Catherine Est)
Drugstore is a giant gay pub-club-situation on a whole bunch of levels with various patios and occasional roof-top wrestling in a kiddie pool. It’s known as a lesbian bar but it’s really an all-encompassing “we’re queer and we have nowhere better to go on a Saturday night” bar. It does cater to the ladies, however, and during Pride many of the big events for the girls will be held here. There are pool tables and video poker machines and they serve fries from a fancy new kitchen.

Sky (1474, rue Ste-Catherine Est)
These are the two wooooooo-let’s-do-shooters-of-something-neon!-gay clubs. Unity often has international DJs and special events. Sky has a downstairs pub and a few different rooms to dance to different drum machines and mingle with different crowds. Everyone is welcome: boys, girls, trans*, cis, queer, straight, and anybody in between. I think I like Sky more, but Unity follows me on Twitter, so it’s a toss up.

Royal Phoenix (5788, boul St-Laurent)
The first officially queer bar outside of the Gay Village, it’s a non-stop party with DJs, live bands, and special events. They’ve got a lot of potential (and gender neutral bathrooms) but the bar service is sometimes so slow that you leave or you get over yourself and just have to dance sober (and thirsty).

Queer-Friendly Bars That Aren’t Necessarily Queer Bars

Bar Waverly (5550, boul St-Laurent). Waverly has a bustling, hipster-chic urban vibe. Impromptu dancing might spontaneously occur between female-bodied individuals with alternative lifestyle haircuts. Also, this is where people find themselves if they get impatient waiting for a drink at the Royal Phoenix.

Le Belmont (4483, boul St-Laurent) is often partying down with DJs spinning drum n bass or dubstep. I’m not going to pretend I like dubstep, but you go right ahead. The place itself has a good vibe.

Cabaret Playhouse (5656, av du Parc) is the home to queer dance parties called Faggity-Ass Fridays. You can’t really host an event with this name without being faggitydyke friendly, can you?

Salon Officiel (351, rue Roy Est). This spicy little rock bar hosts a loud and sexy ladies night – Amène Ta Blonde. The crowd is tattooed and cooler-than-thou, the music is usually good, the service is normally fast.

Else’s (156, rue Roy Est). With a cheap menu of decent bar snacks, a manageable drink list, a dimly lit kitschy interior, and good music all night, Else’s is a gem barely off the beaten path between St-Laurent and St-Denis. Everybody “in the know” loves this sweet little pub (it’s always bustling but never uncomfortably packed) and it’s definitely a fun place to bring a girl for a brew and a bite. Chances of running into your ex girlfriend: slim to none.

Popular Restos and Cafés

Le Cagibi (5490, boul St-Laurent) is a super cute, crowded but cozy café in the Mile-End staffed by tattooed indie rockers. They host nifty events, serve good coffee and tea, and yes, you can totally get a beer (as long as you eat something). Great spot for reading a book or accidentally spilling something all over someone you wish you had an excuse to talk to.

Shaika Café (5526, rue Sherbrooke Ouest). Way out (ha!) in NDG, this is where to find the queer Concordia students who live west-of-downtown. With good coffee, veg friendly grub, and – yes, again – beer, Shaika hosts lots of open mic nights (with some genuinely talented people) and some rad live music. Cue the fiddles.

Le Club Sandwich

Le Club Sandwich (1570, rue Ste-Catherine Est). After those late nights clubbing or drinking or a booty call in the Village, you probably need a poutine (look it up). Or a club sandwich. Or a Coca-Cola from a little glass bottle. This place is always open, the food doesn’t suck, and the people watching is diviiiinnnnnee. 110% queer and trans* friendly.

LGBTQ Events

Amène Ta Blonde at Salon Officiel. Amène ta blonde means bring your girlfriend. It’s probably best you don’t bring your girlfriend to this monthly soirée for ladies who love ladies, because someone will definitely make a pass at you while you’re waiting in the tiny bathroom, and the girls in attendance tend to be hot and… well. It’s just not a girlfriend kind of night.

Meow Mix
The website isn’t always super updated but you can check out the event listings in the free alternative newsweekly, the Montréal Mirror. Meow Mix is a monthly party for queer chicks and those who like to go out on the town with them. They do drag shows, burlesque, dances– you know. The good stuff. Normally at Sala Rossa.

Tease
Tease is a slick, ladies-only hip-hop & house dance party that takes over various clubs throughout the year. It’s not cheap but they often have awesome deals for all-you-can-drink. It’s mostly girls in their 20s, but there are always older lesbians and some of the young’uns too (the drinking age is 18 in Québec).

Fierté Montréal Pride
FACT: Montréal Pride = awesome.
The whole city gets even gayer, if you can imagine. Spend the weekend checking out queer-centered art exhibits, buying cool boxers from obscenely handsome gay men and collecting free condoms (safer strap-on sex FTW) on Ste-Catherine Street, and hitting up some of the zillions of dance parties that take place over the weekend. On Sunday, get a big drunch (drunkbrunch, in case this special word is unfamiliar) with your most homotastic pals, grab some plastic cups and pretend you’re drinking apple juice, and find a spot to watch the really, really long parade while acting like you’re not getting sunstroke. Afterward, the partying continues and swarms of your fellow semi-nude LGBTQueers screw up the heteronormative traffic flow en route to promiscuous, debaucherous Pride parties (AKA lunch, bars, and/or the T-dance).

Divers/cité is outdoor music, cinema, performances, and drag: queers and trans* people are awesomely talented and creative and Pride isn’t actually about how much sangria you can drink or your endless quest for not-tacky rainbow boxers.

Dating Scene

Ok, so you are doing your hair/shining your boots/putting on your Rodeoh Harness under your skinny jeans, and getting ready to go out on the town since you now have a hot list of places to go! Thanks Autostraddle!

Club Unity

How do you go about asking a girl out? I’ll give you a quick French lesson:

Voulez-vous coucher avec moi = not a good pick-up lineJe t’aime = the words you don’t want to hear on your second dateTabarnak = all purpose swear word (if she says this while cringing, she’s not interested)

The girls in MTL really are great and have a reputation as being a little more sexually liberal than the rest of Canada (I’m not making this up, I totally read it in Chatelaine when I was at the eye doctor a couple years ago)… but these hot, awesome, possibly sexually liberal women may well have made out with your ex. Or you and you forgot. Case in point: my bestest lezbro (we don’t use this word to refer to dudes that hang out with us, we use it for each other, whatever) had an ex who was the BFF of my ex and HOW DID WE NOT REALIZE THIS and my other buddy’s ex-lady used to hit on me when she was still with my buddy before we were even buds and this is the same everywhere… this is the lesbian spit-chain and precisely why Alice made the Chart.

So. Uh. Relax and ask her out already.

College Life

Chances are good if you’re considering relocating to Montréal you either A) will only stay until it snows, B) you are aspiring to a career in a call center and you can’t speak French, C) you’re some kind of artist/musician/professional balloon animal maker/circus person, D) or you’re a student.

Let’s go with option D, student. Montréal is a major university town. On the plus side, that equals student discounts, multi-cultural queerdom, and lots of barely used Ikea furniture being sold on craigslist for dirt cheap. On the less posi side, this means there are constant freshman events: scavenger hunts and face paint and chanting crap at when people nearby might still be sleeping because they stayed till the sun came up. YOU KIDS GET OFF MY LAWN.

Anyway.

McGill University is an Ivy league level English-language university in beautiful old buildings all over the downtown area. Check out Queer McGill for your smartypants homogay lifestyle.

There’s also Concordia University, my alma mater. With 40 billion students, some classrooms conveniently located underneath a mall-like food court, a complete lack of greenspace downtown, and really long lines for everything … it’s everything you ever wanted in a uni. Oh, but Concordia boasts the Simone de Beauvoir College if you’re into women’s studies. I’ve heard it’s amazing but I majored in French and occupied myself with debates about pronoun neutralization and reading poems that will really help me find a job some day.

Le Village

Concordia has an LGBTQ+ student group that hosts all kinds of events; they’re called Queer Concordia (go look for them on Facebook). The 2110 Centre for Gender Advocacy is also associated with Concordia. They do a lot of advocacy and campaigning for social justice causes and better women’s and trans* health services. They also have a program where you can donate minimal cash and get a binder (or even a swim binder!) if that’s what you need to comfortably express your gender identity. Awesome place. (For more Concordia info, go to Autostraddle’s fairly recent college guide.)

UQÀM, one of Montréal’s French-language universities, is located downtown in the mish-mash of McGill, Concordia, and 19 year old bar tourists from The States. They don’t seem to have a queer student group, but they do (did?) have a women’s group. Although the blog hasn’t been updated recently, the group may still be active. There’s also the French only Centre des Femmes.

There is also a whole cluster of junior colleges/cégeps, polytéchniques, etc.

It’s a Beautiful Day in the Gaybourhood

Le Village Gai (The Gay Village) is located mostly between métro Beaudry and métro Papineau on the south-east side of downtown, concentrated along Ste-Catherine and de Maisonneuve. It’s a little more about the boys, but there’s no shortage of lesbians and there is a sizeable trans* population as well. The majority of the gay clubs are here, as well as a ton of great restaurants and countless places to get coffee. The yellow dépanneur (aka bodega/convenience store/place to buy beer) at the corner of Ste-Catherine and Visitation is like a social experiment. Venture in. Buy dusty boxes of cookies and and fly swatters and bachelor food.

Some of the side streets and little parks feel a bit sketchy after dark and there is often a pretty heavy police presence. There is active and visible sex work in this area; if that makes you uncomfortable, avoid Ontario Street at night after the bars close.

Métro Beaudry

Other (Slightly Less Gay)bourhoods

The Mile-End (métro Laurier)
Located north of St-Joseph Street and South of Bernard, centered around boulevard St-Laurent and avenue du Parc, the Mile-End is a super hip, über artsy area home to artists (did you guess that?), students, activists, and duh, lesbians. I’d venture to say this is where the heaviest concentration of queer chicks live. Total win. There is a wealth of cafés, cool bars, galleries, friperies, tiny markets, and yummy restos (the illusive taco truck takes over Le Nouveau Palais a few nights a week and the place FILLS with hipsters and queers getting cheap eats after midnight). The fun is endless. Try biking here at night!

Le Plateau Mont-Royal (métros Sherbrooke & Mont-Royal)
Said to be one of the most awesome places on the continent (another Montréal fact that may or not be invented), Le Plateau is a trendy area of clubs, bars, boutiques, and bistros. It is situated literally on a Plateau- walk from métro St-Laurent up to Sherbrooke to get a feel for it; skip it if you are wearing stilettos/it’s icy/you don’t like walking up really big hills. Le Plateau is heavily populated by working artists (this is not an oxymoron) and is full of pricy/adorable apartments with nice woodwork and spiral staircases, snazzy nightclubs, a couple divey spots to make you feel better about yourself, and futuristic furniture stores no one can actually afford to shop in. Head up to Parc Mont-Royal on a Sunday to enjoy the Tam-Tams, a city-wide gathering of drum circles and fencing and picnicking on the mountain.

Aux Vivres

St-Henri (métros Lionel-Groulx & Place-St-Henri)
This neighbourhood on the south-west end of the city is one of my favourites although it is rapidly being gentrified. It’s a mix of brand new condos, beat up apartments painted funky colours by a series of residents who have transferred their leases to avoid rent increases, and a crazy complex of jamspaces and communal-living anarcho-lofts by the train tracks. The neighbourhood is populated by new immigrants, students, young families and long time resident Québecois families, and alternative folks of all stripes– it’s like a microcosmic snapshot of the city. There’s still some cheap housing and an increasingly delicious collection of bars. Venture west to get tattooed at Glamort (4411, rue Notre-Dame Ouest), and try Le Caffé Mariani (4450, rue Notre-Dame Ouest) for a good coffee. Check out the Atwater Market to scope local veggies (and girls), go biking along the Lachine Canal, or RENT A BOAT! Yes, you CAN.

NDG, formally Notre-Dame-de-Grâce (métros Vendôme & Villa Maria)
Semi-affectionately called No Damn Good, this is a sprawling majority Anglophone neighbourhood on the west end of the city that houses Concordia University’s Loyola campus. It is also home to a surprising number of lesbians– consensus is that they are mostly coupled and they choose this neighb’ because the housing is cheap and they like riding the 105 bus (this part is probably a lie because no one likes riding the 105 bus). The Monkland Village is a cute strip with tons of cupcake bakeries and moms in LuLu Lemon pants (I wasn’t looking, I swear). Further south, on Sherbrooke, there is a pretty awesome chocolate store. The woman who runs it is amazingly adept at helping pick justttt the stuff to get your sorry ass out of the doghouse. Just don’t tell your girlfriend you didn’t pick out the chocolate yourself…

Little Italy (métro Jean Talon)
Another fun area of clustered side streets and great cafés, Little Italy is just far enough out to be affordable. It is home to the legendary Jean Talon Market which is awesome for all things delicious, and Il Motore, a cool, divey/indie show bar (it earned major queer points when Lucas Silveira, Hunter Valentine, and Sick of Sarah played there in 2011).

Of course, there’s also Centre-Ville (downtown) and Old Montréal, both full of restaurants, bars, and shopping. Less queer-centric, but you can find loads of amazing museums, good theatres, and lots of clothes.

Safety and Places to Avoid

Like any big city, bad things happen here. However, in 5+ years living in Montréal, I never once discovered an area I didn’t feel at least mostly safe– and I have been to all the “bad” neighbourhoods, usually in the middle of the night and generally wearing things like fishnets and hotpants and neon wigs with like $400 cash tucked semi-visibly into my bra or boots. I wish I were making this up.

Ultimately, random violent crime is pretty uncommon and gun violence is significantly lower than many US cities. In very-central Montréal, just watch your pockets around métro Berri-UQÀM (muggings aren’t so uncommon on the side streets) heading toward Beaudry. There are no areas in Montréal I would say you should absolutely avoid; use common sense if something/somewhere feels a little shady.

LGBT and Women’s Health Services

À deux mains/ Head and Hands
According to their website, Head and Hands offers “medical, legal and social services.” They are queers and trans* positive/inclusive and offer a drop-in clinic, counseling services, and a general safe space for youth.

There is also an LGBTQ Youth Center at the Beaconsfield United Church on the West Island if you so happen to be out in the middle of nowhere.

ATQ: Aide aux transexuels et transexuelles du Québec (mostly in French) is an association to support the local trans* community and combat prejudice. They provide information about surgeries, the legal aspects of transitioning in Québec, current events, and more.

Casa del Popolo

Centre de Solidarité Lesbienne (4126, rue St-Denis, Bureau 301)
Center for Lesbian Solidarity. Among other things, a solid support for those recovering from or dealing with conjugal violence. Site in French only.

Project 10 Help Line (514) 989-4585, a hotline for LGBTQ+ youth 14-25. Lines are open in the afternoons and early evenings or you can drop in on Thursday nights, 6:30pm to 8:30pm. They offer peer counseling, advocacy and accompaniment services, and fun stuff like camping retreats.

Gay Line and Gai Écoute (514)-866-5090.
These are suicide prevention and listening hotlines. Gai Écoute is French; Gay Line is English. Call the shared phone number and you’ll be directed as needed. Both are anonymous and confidential. Gay-Line is open in the evenings between 7 and 11. If you have a Telus phone, you can dial “1010 and be connected right away.

Support for LGBT Families

The LGBT Family Coalition is an organization that offers workshops, informational seminars, and social activities to LGBT parents/families.

All Things Arts

The Ste-Emilie Skillshare (3942, rue Ste. Emilie) is a super queer and trans* posi place for community arts, learning new things (brewing? screen printing? DIY sex toy making?), or checking out the occasional vernissage. They have a solid calendar of upcoming workshops and events.

Image+Nation: Less party, more smart! Image+Nation is an international LGBT film fest.

Studio XX is a feminist art center that embraces both bilingualism (major plus in MTL) and technology.

Queer Tango. It’s supposedly fun for people that maybe can act like grownups for 0.3 seconds.

LGBT or Feminist Bookstores

Concordia’s Co-Op Bookstore (2150, rue Bishop) is cooperatively run and sells textbooks, regular books, zines, and they do consignment. They totally support local writers and artists.

Insoumise (2033, boul St-Laurent) is an anti-authoritarian bookstore and community space that houses lots of feminist lit.

poutine

Salons for Alternative Lifestyle Haircuts

Helmet (163, av du Mont-Royal Est)
Go see Dany. He’s super queer and totally rocks the shears (that was like a hair haiku). He cut my hair and it was like an amazing therapy sesh and I walked out of there feeling like Wonder-Dyke who could totally pick up every girl I walked anywhere near. Thank YOUUU Dany for understanding the plight of the lesbian fashion mullet.

Coupe Bizarre (3770, boul St-Laurent)
The go-to for asymmetrical and all things colourful.

Tattoos

Saving Grace Tattoo (5626, rue Sherbrooke Ouest )
This little shop, all tucked away on Sherbrooke Street in NDG, is male-run but lesbian friendly. Had you stopped in during the summer, you would have totally heard a chick dominated playlist on repeat and probably would have had your appointment scheduled by a tattooed lesbionic creature who would have loved to flex her biceps for you. Uh, seriously though, Alex K’eh tattoos a lot of lesbians, it’s almost ridiculous. Although a custom shop with lots of appointments, you can sometimes nab a walk-in.

Other shops that put out solid and unique work and have good reputations but at which I have not worked:

These are all custom shops and many artists have significant wait times. There are other worthy shops in town too; please do your research and call in advance (even though you have to go find the phone numbers yourselves).

Counting Your Loonies & Toonies (aka Cost of Living)

Compared to other major cities:

Rent = affordable. You can probably live without 14 roommates. Depending on the area, you can definitely score solo digs for $500-600/month, and easily get a place with roommate for $800-1000 total (often less). It might even be a cute place with a big balcony and plenty of closet space and nice floors.

Food = not so cheap but way cheaper than in Vancouver.

Booze = significantly more expensive than in neighbouring NY but relatively cheap and accessible compared to some other Canadian provinces.

Public transport = an arm and a leg if you’re just visiting. Check our your options for day passes, evening passes, or a pass for a week (hebdomadaire). You also get a better bang for your buck if you buy 2 tickets at once ($5.50) instead of 1 at a time (3 bucks a pop- ouch!).

Queer Friendliness of the City

This town has a pretty vivre et laisser vivre attitude. Like anywhere, there are less-than-awesome encounters with unpleasant people, but for the most part, your over the top PDA won’t phase anyone. They’ll either ignore you or tell you to get a room (but they don’t care if it’s a lesbian room).

Sports

Les Canadiens. Practice this: GO HABS GO!
Try to score some tickets to watch a match at the Bell Center. You will drink Molson and you won’t even think about the Maple Leafs. Have I told you that hockey is life? Hockey.is.life.

Les Alouettes are Montréal’s football team, also known as the Als. They play at Percival Molson Stadium.

The Stingers is the name for all of Concordia’s sports teams. I bet McGill has sports teams too, but… whatever.

Team Montreal. Pretty much every sport you can imagine has a gay team in Montréal.

The Dukes of Drag
Yes, dragkings are athletes of gender-bending and making your panties/boxerbriefs wet. I think Autostraddle will probably move this link out from the sports section. I don’t know where to put it.

Montréal Roller Derby. You love roller derby! Of course you do. And you might see Tegan and/or Sara in the stands, it’s been known to happen. Tickets sell out fast– buy in bulk, bring your friends.

Thank you for the obligatory picture of poutine. I am trying to remember whatever song we used to sing at McGill v Concordia hockey games but I can’t. So I will just say how many beautiful beautiful women play sports for McGill and that you probably missed out on us. 😉

I love Montreal! Probably my favourite city in all of North America because it combines American and European culture so well, is pretty diverse and very liberal! I lived there before (near St. Henri and also loved it) and I used to visit fairly regularly. Ste-Catharines is nice, Mont-Royal is awesome and even more awesome is the rent – dirt cheap compared to many other big cities in North America. And then there are the crêpes and poutine! Tho’ Quebec City is a bit better for both of those. Sadly, when I lived in Montreal I did not know I was queer so I never got to take advantage of the awesome queer spots and it’s been a couple years since my last visit. Hopefully, next time I visit I may be able to check out a few of them!

asdfghjkl this is making me consider Concordia 10x more than i was before. honestly, there are like 0 cons to it right now, besides being far away from home and not speaking french, but i’m not sure if the former is a con or not, and the latter isn’t really a con because i can learn it…

I secretly sat beside one Miss Emily Choo for an entire semester, unbeknownst to me, since it was in my pre-Autostraddle days. Also also I guarantee that if you walk around campus in yer aggressively sexual STRADDLE THIS tee, you’ll get eyes from the manymany alternative lifestyled queers

As long as you can read French well enough to read street signs and get the gist of metro announcements you should be okay. There are many anglo neighbourhoods that are relatively close to downtown, so you should be ok if you live in one of those areas.

Hey! I can’t log in for some reason, but I wrote this and just wanted to comment…
In the article, I included this link:http://www.vaniercollege.qc.ca/open-door-network/community-resources.html
It has TONS of community resources, including some that you mentioned. I decided to use this approach so that the city guide didn’t become 20 pages of health resources, when a compilation of resources was readily available elsewhere 🙂

Do you know if JJ *just* moved shop? I checked everything a few weeks ago and didn’t see anything about it. Weird? Anyway! **JJ LEVINE IS NOW AT 824 ONTARIO EAST, 514-624-HAIR.

PS.. I’m a biased Concordia grad– I can’t acknowledge the sports teams at other universities or they might take back my diploma!!! 🙂
PPS.. Perverscité is a great time, indeed.

MONTREAL REPRESENT! It’s an amazing city…always something to do and there are gay people everywhere! Concordia is also the best university around! Pride. Pride. Pride. Friends of mine started a Montreal Gay and Lesbian (more lesbian) website to fill everyone in on wicked cool LGBT events. They meet organizers, give the low-down, and report! Check some vids out!

This is AMAZINGLY relevant to the Autostraddle meetup I want to put together in Montreal at the end of March 🙂 Is anyone down to meet up? I’m from Ottawa and due for a trip! E-mail me here if you’d be interested in meeting a bunch of Montreal and Ottawastraddlers in the next couple of weeks: cstreeting[at]gmail[dot]com.

I stumbled upon Bikurious by complete accident while wandering near le village gai and I pretty much lost my mind. There was a sign out front on particle board that said “lesbian haircuts $15”. Yes I took a picture.

Thanks for this. I’m really considering moving to Canada later this year, and I’d definitely like to find a place that’s queer+. MTL sounds like an amazing wonderful place. PS: for anyone knowledgeable, what is the process for immigrating to Canada?

It depends what you are immigrating for. The easiest thing to do IMO is to go to school… once you graduate university, you can apply for a post-graduation work visa. This requires you to complete a certain number of hours of work that must fall into certain categories; this generally takes between 1 and 3 years… After that, you can apply for permanent residency.
Citizenship and Immigration Canada has all the real info: http://www.cic.gc.ca/

I studied women’s studies at the Simone de Beauvoir institute, (the oldest women’s studies college in Canada under the late, great Lillian Robinson), I lived in mile end (a few blocks from where Phoenix opened just after I moved tabarnak) I played shows at shaika, sala and casa, drank a million pints at drugstore, and generally loved the shit out of that town. God i miss Montreal so much. Great piece, Sid.

This post is awesome and completely accurate! It also makes me very homesick, I’ve been traveling for six months and reading about Montreal’s awesomeness reminds me how much awesomeness I’m missing out on! Also I love the word awesome…

I hear it’s a bit easier to get into Quebec because they have a different system than other provinces, and the waitlist is a bit shorter due to people being frightened off by the whole French thing. GO FOR IT! Mind you, it will take at least 5 years or so.

Thanks for including the Dukes of Drag in your review : ) Including us in the sports section was quite clever 😉 However, if you are looking for another section to put us in, perhaps your art section would be appropriate since we do consider ourselves to be stage artists : )

Thanks again! Oh, also, thanks for including the Vanier College link. In addition to being a Duke, I’m a co-founder of the Open Door Network at Vanier College and it makes me happy to see that the site is useful.

I lived in Montreal last year, going to Concordia, and they do have about a million sweet queer and alternative happenings on any given week.

Two things:

Montreal is pretty much the cheapest city I know of. I know a lot of people who paid $300 rent for nice places in trendy areas, and I paid $390 for an old, hardwood-floored apartment in a really nice area. Food is also fresh and super cheap, especially if you shop at Middle Eastern family depanneurs.

And while it is very diverse and welcoming, I was targeted and/or witnessed anti-gay harassment many times while with a partner outside of the gay village. I would recommend keeping PDA to an absolute minimum on the Metro at night, and to be very careful on it during the day as well, to be honest.

I’d avoid the Village, to be honest. Mile-End has really become a lesbian mecca, and almost all queers or activist lesbians have migrated from the Village, which has become a high-priced and dated area, to the Plateau or the Mile-End (which is very English speaking). The Village caters to mostly gay men of an older age.

Le Drugstore is a disaster these days – it’s over-priced (for what you get), the drinks are appalling (the staff aren’t trained), and mostly young Bieber type lesbians show up. The drag show isn’t bad, though, if you’re into that sort of thing. Le Drugstore is massive, but generally half full, even on weekend nights. Go for the terrace in the summer – otherwise, I’d avoid it. Unity has become very “straight” – think drunk girls and gay men, trailed by stalkerish straight men. Most of the time I see very few lesbians there – if you are attractive, you will be hit on relentlessly by straight men who pretend to be gay. Sky is OK – head to the hip hop room if you want to find lesbians or bisexual women.

Royal Phoenix (in the Mile-End) is a wonderful bar – it’s very eclectic and basically everything the Village is not these days: prices are reasonable, the events are inventive and catered toward the diversity of the LGBTQ community, staff are friendly, and the people watching (and picking up) is fabulous. Oh, and the music is great. I would honestly avoid the Village in the winter (it’s fun to walk through in the summer) – head to the Mile-End.

Be careful if you go to strip clubs. Le Super Sexe (on ste catherine) is a terrible club – go if you want to confirm every feminist idea you hold dear. You’ll see very young women strip for dirty old men, while they taunt them and objectify them. It’s really gross. I’d opt for a burlesque show or a queer strip show somewhere else. The strip clubs are really gritty and the exploitation of young female strippers there is explicit, shameless, and terribly sad.

Definitely check out a Montreal Roller Derby bout – always lots of queer women there and lots of queer players. The owner of the Royal Pheonix Bar, Smack Daddy, plays for the New Skids on the Block and the afterparties are always at the Royal Pheonix. Super fun.

Yay! First post I’ve found on Autostraddle about a Canadian city! Forgive me if I am too silly to have found the others… Out Magazine named 5 ‘Gayest’ cities and I looked them up and was so happy to see my city too. 🙂 Woooo

As a closeted and young high school student living in Mtl, I didn`t realize how my city`s full of opportunities to meet queer girls! Where are they hiding? Definitely not in my neighbourhood…
Can`t wait to start cegep!

For those of you who will be in Montreal on Saturday, an Autostraddle meetup will be taking place at 7:30pm on Saturday 31st at the Royal Phoenix Bar (5788 St-Laurent Blvd. (corner of Bernard …)). Hope many of you can make it!

Hi Sid!
I built an updated Montreal Queer Guide as a lot of the places above are no longer open:(
The link is below. Hopefully you guys find it helpful:)
Also not trying to steal your thunder! Just trying to be helpful.

Hi Sid!
I built an updated Montreal Lesbian Guide as a lot of the places above are no longer open:(
The link is below. Hopefully you guys find it helpful:)
Also not trying to steal your thunder! Just trying to be helpful.

Wonderful! I guess it didn’t occur to any of you dykes that’s what in your uterus has a function. No bitterness here, just pity. Amazing how feminism has come so low. Not that it wasn’t always so It was in so many failed civilizations, like Greece. Read the poems of Sappho if you haven’t (I’m guessing not). If you did, you would find a testament to a failed civilization, an homesexual one. Why failed, because it is without progeny, without hope and without dedication to the future. So thanks for tipping us to the abyss. I would suggest that you start learning Mandarin real fast. Why will they conquer? Because just like Atehns, our men have nothing to fight for.

Seriously who the fuck was this idiot?! Yeah unfounded dump insults and say bye why don’t you. I guess it’s easy to rant and run than try and answer to your ugly insults. Truly the hallmark of “civilized heterosexual.”

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